
A small rustic stump with a scroll and a tiny lamb for two young children who died within days of each other, probably of the same disease.
A small rustic stump with a scroll and a tiny lamb for two young children who died within days of each other, probably of the same disease.
A wreath and branch decorate the impressive but tasteful Hughey monument.
A romantic broken column, with statue, in memory of Margaret, Fannie W., and Dr. James A. Potts.
William Slater has the most elegant, and probably most expensive, mausoleum in the Mount Lebanon Cemetery—hardly surprising, since he was a very successful funeral director. It does not compare with the great works of architecture in the Allegheny, Homewood, or Union Dale cemeteries, but it is certainly nothing to be ashamed of.
The very rich had their mausoleums designed for them by famous architects. The merely adequately rich ordered their mausoleums from a catalogue. We can say with some confidence that this attractive but undistinguished Romanesque mausoleum is a stock model because it is identical, including the statue, to the Braun mausoleum in the South Side Cemetery.